Luis Torres - July
11, 2023
Mexico became
the top U.S. trading partner at the beginning of 2023, with total bilateral
trade between the two countries totaling $263 billion during the first four
months of this year.
Mexico's
emergence followed fractious U.S. relations with China, which had moved past
Canada to claim the top trading spot in 2014. The dynamic changed in 2018 when
the U.S. imposed tariffs on China’s goods and with subsequent pandemic-era
supply-chain disruptions that altered international trade and investment flows
worldwide.
Mexico’s gains
mirror its rise in manufacturing, a key component of goods moving between it
and the U.S. During the first four months of 2023, total trade of manufactured
goods between Mexico and the U.S. reached $234.2 billion.
Mexico
positioned as a manufacturing base
Mexico’s
expanding manufacturing base has offered an alternative to producing in China.
Sourcing or producing goods in a nearby country is sometimes referred to as
“nearshoring.”
More activity
in Mexico would support increased bilateral manufacturing with the U.S. It
would also bolster Mexico’s standing as the U.S.’ leading manufacturing trading
partner, a ranking it achieved in 2022.
Luis Torres is
a senior business economist in the San Antonio Branch of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas.
https://www.dallasfed.org/research/economics/2023/0711